Issue: 1/3 to 1/2 of all jobs are projected to be performed by technology in the next 20 - 30 years. This could devastate the economy with unemployment higher than the Great Depression, removing our consumer base, etc...

Solution: (Two Step Process)Step One: The formation of The Department of Robotics and Automated Labor - which is something like what the DMV is for cars, but for robotics and automation systems. It will register and regulate these technologies for existence and use, determining what is "street legal" for a robot, and providing national security by licensing who has access to potentially destructive technologies.

Step Two: Legislative framework to patch the breaking of the natural check and balance which enables capitalism to function - the consumer base owning the labor force. The working draft of this framework legislation is as follows: [ Every citizen has the right to one equal share of the robotic labor force, an equal vote for what it performs, and a fair share of what it produces. ] This means a nationalizing of the robotic labor force similar to the nationalization of the military and those assets. The robotic labor force would then be rented hourly to businesses of any size, instead of being owned by only the large businesses with the capital to consolidate. Citizens would then be able to vote on what these technologies do or do not do in society, preventing any individual or company from taking control of very large parts of the labor force, and in this way democracy is maintained. Voters would be paid a portion of the hourly rental fee for taking on the voting responsibility, essentially being paid for voting on what their robot does in their place. This payment system buys America more informed and active voters, which welfare does not. The voting payment also maintains a consumer base regardless of wherever the unemployment rate may go, and ensures a demand side to complement the greater supply side afforded to the economy by technological labor. This continues the consumer cycle, and maintains a thriving capitalist economy, negating the negative economic effects from the technology derived unemployment - thus solving the problem of humans becoming 'obsolete' in much of the workforce.

2) Modern Privacy Rights, Data and Internet Publication Protection for Citizens: Issue: The United States Government generates public records on citizens, which anyone with an internet connection can then look at. This is not wrong to do in all respects, but in some cases, for example: if a person is arrested for something they are later found not to have done, but a defaming arrest record is made public to haunt employer or personal background checks for the rest of that citizen's life, it is certainly an unjustified punishment, and wrong. Solution: Upon the finding of innocence or dismissal of charges, the citizen should be asked if they would like the records deleted from public view, and such actions should be taken by the court. Public defenders will also be required to represent citizens during expungement processes, so unsupported records do not become defaming public records.3) Constitutional Rights: People are people, and only people, not corporations, have constitutional free speech. Issue: In 2010 the U.S. Supreme Court passed 'Citizens United' which equates money as free speech awarded to corporations, and the same as people have the first amendment right to free speech, corporations thus have the right to unlimited contribution of money to political campaigns. This enables corporate corruption, as well as harming national security in that a foreign nation can use a corporation to anonymously manipulate the United States political system. Solution: People are people, and while a legal entity like a corporation can be viewed like a legal person for business practices, legal entities should not themselves have constitutional rights as people. Legislation is being proposed by a group called "Move to Amend" which would solve this problem through a constitutional amendment that defines humans as people, and corporations to not be people awarded constitutional rights. So far, Move to Amend has over 300,000 petition signatures in support of this legislation.